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[Anaplasma phagocytophila and protozoans of Babesia genus in dogs from endemic areas of Lyme disease in north-western Poland].

Infections caused by the spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato may be accompanied by other microorganisms, such as Anaplasma, Ehrlichia and Babesia. These pathogens are transmitted by the ticks and are a risk to humans and animals. Ixodes ricinus ticks collected from recreational areas of Szczecin and northwestern Poland contained DNA of the pathogens mentioned above and cases of double and triple coinfection have been documented. The aim of this paper was to determine if dogs suspect to tick infestation in the area of study are a reservoir for these pathogens and to examine the possibility of coinfection. Canine blood was sampled, part of the material originated from dogs exhibiting symptoms of borreliosis. In an earlier study, the samples were screened for DNA from B. burgdorferi sensu lato. In order to screen for A. phagocytophila and Babesia sp. DNA, a PCR-based method was used with the following primers: EHR521/EHR747 for Anaplasma and FOR1/REV1 for Babesia. In 192 samples only two contained A. phagocytophila DNA. One of these samples originated from a healthy canine, the other from an individual with symptoms of borreliosis. The examined samples were not positive for Babesia sp. DNA. Coinfection was not discovered. The low level of A. phagocytophila infection may indicate that the domestic dog is not a reservoir for Anaplasma and Babesia in Szczecin and northwestern Poland. Moreover, this area does not have populations of the brown dog tick (Rhipicephalus sanguineus) or Dermacentor reticulates--both of which are vectors of E. canis and B. canis and commonly induce ehrlichiosis and babesiosis in canines.

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